A review of annual reports from the director of Operational Testing and Evaluation (DOT&E) didn't uncover any mentions of oxygen issues, with the exception of a 2004 report noting that the contractor measured oxygen concentrations during simulated high-altitude mission profiles at their simulator system facility. Former DOT&E Director Tom Christie told POGO he didn't recall problems with the system and that they could have been relatively easily fixed if they had been detected. According to Flight Global, Boeing led life support development, including the OBOGS.

POGO has not been able to find other information on testing for the F-22's OBOGS, but simulation would not be sufficient to test the system. "It's not something you simulate," Christie told POGO. "It either works or it doesn't."

Even when these systems are working, an interview with aerospace and operational physiologist Capt. Matthew Taranto at the Las Vegas Sun explains that pilots must train their bodies to be able to tolerate 15 seconds of intense acceleration pressing down on them (9 G-forces) to resist oxygen deprivation to their brain.

Comments

Airplanejim is right. It will all come out in the official investigation. OBOGS has been around for a long time. I think my first exposure was with the AV8-B. There were some bugs back then but it should be a pretty mature system now. OBOGS could have been a tag along test during ECS eval and wouldn't necessarily show up as a primary test objective. People just like to be the first ones to 'expose the truth' even if they don't have correct or even complete data.

Nothing like jumping to conclusions by the POGO writer. Why don't we wait an see what the findings are from the LM and DOD engineering teams? There are numerous possibilities of what the problem is. It may not have been found in flight testing because it is a maintenance issue.